| Literature DB >> 31760550 |
Jill A Rabinowitz1, Sally I-Chun Kuo2, Benjamin Domingue3, Mieka Smart4, William Felder5, Kelly Benke5, Brion S Maher5, Nicholas S Ialongo5, George Uhl6.
Abstract
We investigated the extent to which performance on standardized achievement tests, executive function (EF), and aggression in childhood and adolescence accounted for the relationship between a polygenic score for educational attainment (EA PGS) and years of education in a community sample of African Americans. Participants (N = 402; 49.9% female) were initially recruited for an elementary school-based prevention trial in a Mid-Atlantic city and followed into adulthood. In first and twelfth grade, participants completed math and reading standardized tests and teachers reported on participants' aggression and EF, specifically impulsivity and concentration problems. At age 20, participants reported on their years of education and post-secondary degrees attained and their genotype was assayed from blood or buccal swabs. An EA PGS was created using results from a large-scale GWAS on EA. A higher EA PGS was associated with higher education indirectly via adolescent achievement. No other mediating mechanisms were significant. Adolescent academic achievement is thus one mechanism through which polygenic propensity for EA influences post-secondary education among urban, African American youth.Entities:
Keywords: Achievement; Adolescence; Aggression; Childhood; Educational attainment; Executive function; Polygenic score
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31760550 PMCID: PMC6942631 DOI: 10.1007/s10519-019-09982-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Genet ISSN: 0001-8244 Impact factor: 2.805